The curious case of New Jersey congressman Jeff Van Drew took an unexpected turn today as the politician, who had been absent from public view for weeks, emerged to endorse former President Donald Trump. The move has left UK allies scratching their heads, but for markets, it is simply another data point in the volatility index.
Van Drew, who defected from the Democratic Party to the Republican Party in 2019, had been missing in action since early January. Speculation ranged from political sabotage to a sabbatical. His reappearance, however, was not to clarify his absence but to throw his weight behind Trump's 2024 bid. “I know President Trump will restore the economy and secure our borders,” Van Drew declared.
The endorsement comes at a time when the British government is grappling with its own fiscal headaches. The Chancellor’s Autumn Statement, which promised tax cuts but failed to impress the bond market, has left gilt yields flirting with danger zones. A political sideshow in New Jersey is unlikely to move the needle on UK borrowing costs, but it underscores the global drift towards populist economics.
For the City of London, the story is a reminder that political uncertainty remains a key driver of capital flows. Investors who piled into US Treasuries as a safe haven are now eyeing the political landscape with caution. If Trump continues to gain momentum, his protectionist trade policies could reignite inflation fears, forcing the Federal Reserve to keep rates higher for longer. That would be bad news for the pound, which has already shed 5% against the dollar this year.
UK allies may be bemused by Van Drew's theatrics, but they should be more concerned about the broader trend. The transatlantic alliance has been fraying since Brexit, and a second Trump term could accelerate the decoupling. British exporters, already struggling with EU red tape, would face a double whammy of US tariffs and a weak pound.
However, the market's verdict on Van Drew's endorsement was a resounding shrug. The FTSE 100 barely moved, and the pound traded flat against the dollar. As any seasoned trader will tell you, one missing congressman does not a bear market make. But the cumulative effect of such political distractions is a slow erosion of trust in institutions.
Fiscal responsibility is the elephant in the room. The US national debt has ballooned to $34 trillion under both parties, and neither Trump nor President Biden has shown any appetite for austerity. The UK is not much better, with public sector net debt approaching 100% of GDP. The only question is when the bond market will force a reckoning.
For now, Van Drew is back in the spotlight, endorsing a man who once mused about buying Greenland. But the real mystery is not his whereabouts; it is why markets continue to ignore the fiscal cliff ahead. As I have said before, the bottom line is that when the music stops, there will be no chairs left.











